{"title":"Vladimir Solovyov: The Philosophy of the Last Classic. Lecture","authors":"A. P. Kozyrev","doi":"10.24833/2541-8831-2023-3-27-146-160","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The article was prepared on the basis of an open lecture given on April 8, 2022 at the Center Church and International Relations MGIMO of the acting Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University A. P. Kozyrev. The article raises the question of the significance of the legacy of Vladimir Sergeyevich Solovyov (1853–1900) in Russian philosophy. It is argued that Vladimir Solovyov was a man of the universal, ecumenical type. The author characterizes Solovyov’s philosophy as the completion of European philosophical systematics, noting the syncretic nature of his teaching and the influence of Platonism, Gnosticism, Hermeticism, and early Christianity on the thoughts of the Origen of the 19th century, as Solovyov’s contemporaries called him. He also cites the characteristics of Solovyov’s thought given by individual contemporaries and representatives of subsequent Russian philosophy — S. N. Bulgakov, G. V. Florovsky, F. A. Stepun, A. Kozhev and others. In answers to questions at the end of the lecture, a number of essential provisions on works and personality of V. S. Solovyov are clarified. According to the thinker, the fate of Russia depends on the choice of Christianity or opposing oneself to the entire Christian world. For him, there is a distinction between religious Westernism and non-religious Westernism. A.P. Kozyrev subsumes P. Ya. Chaadaev to the type of religious Westerner, since P. Ya. Chaadaev based his ideas of building a Christian kingdom — the city of God on earth, as Augustine wrote on medieval Christianity. Solovyov per se considered himself somewhere in between. A genius cannot be limited to one political ideology, narrow political worldview, a genius does not think in black and white the categories. It makes Solovyov’s idea that there are not only different Wests, but different Easts — China, Japan, and above all the Middle East, Jerusalem — as well. The nature of these and similar constructions allows us to see in Solovyov not only a taxonomist, but a religious philosopher, who argues that a metaphysical lever is necessary to fight evil. It is not for nothing that Solovyov begins Three Conversations with a reflection on whether evil is only a lack of good, a kind of ghost that can easily be eliminated, or whether evil is a real force with its own substance and its essence, and can be defeated not by abstract good, but by the God-man. Therefore, Three Conversations, Including a Short Story of the Anti-Christ is not just a prophecy about the finale of world history, where the Antichrist appears under the guise of a socialist, humanist and philanthropist, he is a politician, president of the United States of Europe, ready to open sacristies to the Orthodox and return the papacy to Catholics, Protestants create an institute for the study of the Bible, you just have to worship him as God. This idea of fake good is destructive for life itself. All that glitters is not gold — this is the maxim of Three Conversations. Good is determined not by the amount of goods that a person produces, but by the name for which they are done, what is put at the forefront. Solovyov, in a certain sense, founded Russian liberalism and the philosophy of law (the human right to a dignified existence, criticism of the death penalty). P. I. Novgorodtsev will call Solovyov the founder of the Moscow school of legal philosophy. Solovyov thinks of law as a way to ensure a minimum of good in society, connects law and morality, basing law on a moral imperative, from which it cannot be decoupled, otherwise the legal norm degenerates, turning into a moral fetish. “The task of law is not at all to turn the world lying in evil into the Kingdom of God, but only to ensure that it does not turn into hell before the time comes,” wrote Solovyov.","PeriodicalId":33644,"journal":{"name":"Kontsept filosofiia religiia kul''tura","volume":"22 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Kontsept filosofiia religiia kul''tura","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2023-3-27-146-160","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The article was prepared on the basis of an open lecture given on April 8, 2022 at the Center Church and International Relations MGIMO of the acting Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University A. P. Kozyrev. The article raises the question of the significance of the legacy of Vladimir Sergeyevich Solovyov (1853–1900) in Russian philosophy. It is argued that Vladimir Solovyov was a man of the universal, ecumenical type. The author characterizes Solovyov’s philosophy as the completion of European philosophical systematics, noting the syncretic nature of his teaching and the influence of Platonism, Gnosticism, Hermeticism, and early Christianity on the thoughts of the Origen of the 19th century, as Solovyov’s contemporaries called him. He also cites the characteristics of Solovyov’s thought given by individual contemporaries and representatives of subsequent Russian philosophy — S. N. Bulgakov, G. V. Florovsky, F. A. Stepun, A. Kozhev and others. In answers to questions at the end of the lecture, a number of essential provisions on works and personality of V. S. Solovyov are clarified. According to the thinker, the fate of Russia depends on the choice of Christianity or opposing oneself to the entire Christian world. For him, there is a distinction between religious Westernism and non-religious Westernism. A.P. Kozyrev subsumes P. Ya. Chaadaev to the type of religious Westerner, since P. Ya. Chaadaev based his ideas of building a Christian kingdom — the city of God on earth, as Augustine wrote on medieval Christianity. Solovyov per se considered himself somewhere in between. A genius cannot be limited to one political ideology, narrow political worldview, a genius does not think in black and white the categories. It makes Solovyov’s idea that there are not only different Wests, but different Easts — China, Japan, and above all the Middle East, Jerusalem — as well. The nature of these and similar constructions allows us to see in Solovyov not only a taxonomist, but a religious philosopher, who argues that a metaphysical lever is necessary to fight evil. It is not for nothing that Solovyov begins Three Conversations with a reflection on whether evil is only a lack of good, a kind of ghost that can easily be eliminated, or whether evil is a real force with its own substance and its essence, and can be defeated not by abstract good, but by the God-man. Therefore, Three Conversations, Including a Short Story of the Anti-Christ is not just a prophecy about the finale of world history, where the Antichrist appears under the guise of a socialist, humanist and philanthropist, he is a politician, president of the United States of Europe, ready to open sacristies to the Orthodox and return the papacy to Catholics, Protestants create an institute for the study of the Bible, you just have to worship him as God. This idea of fake good is destructive for life itself. All that glitters is not gold — this is the maxim of Three Conversations. Good is determined not by the amount of goods that a person produces, but by the name for which they are done, what is put at the forefront. Solovyov, in a certain sense, founded Russian liberalism and the philosophy of law (the human right to a dignified existence, criticism of the death penalty). P. I. Novgorodtsev will call Solovyov the founder of the Moscow school of legal philosophy. Solovyov thinks of law as a way to ensure a minimum of good in society, connects law and morality, basing law on a moral imperative, from which it cannot be decoupled, otherwise the legal norm degenerates, turning into a moral fetish. “The task of law is not at all to turn the world lying in evil into the Kingdom of God, but only to ensure that it does not turn into hell before the time comes,” wrote Solovyov.
这篇文章是根据莫斯科国立大学哲学学院代理院长A. P. Kozyrev于2022年4月8日在莫斯科国立大学国际关系中心教堂和国际关系中心的公开演讲编写的。这篇文章提出了弗拉基米尔·谢尔盖耶维奇·索洛维约夫(1853-1900)在俄罗斯哲学中的遗产意义的问题。有人认为弗拉基米尔·索洛维约夫是一个普世的、普世的人。作者将索洛维约夫的哲学描述为欧洲哲学系统学的完成,指出了他的教学的综合性质,以及柏拉图主义、诺斯替主义、赫尔墨斯主义和早期基督教对19世纪奥利金思想的影响,索洛维约夫的同时代人称他为奥利金。他还引用了索洛维约夫思想的特征,这些特征是由同时代的个体和后来的俄罗斯哲学的代表人物——S. N.布尔加科夫、G. V.弗洛罗夫斯基、F. A. Stepun、A. Kozhev等人给出的。在讲座的最后回答问题时,对索洛维约夫的作品和人格的一些重要规定进行了澄清。在这位思想家看来,俄罗斯的命运取决于选择基督教还是反对整个基督教世界。在他看来,宗教西化和非宗教西化是有区别的。A.P. Kozyrev包含p.a Ya。查达耶夫的宗教类型西方人,自p雅。Chaadaev的想法是建立一个基督教王国——地球上的上帝之城,正如奥古斯丁在中世纪基督教中所写的那样。索洛维约夫本人认为自己介于两者之间。一个天才不可能局限于一种政治意识形态,狭隘的政治世界观,一个天才不思考非黑即白的范畴。这使得索洛维约夫的观点不仅有不同的西方,也有不同的东方——中国,日本,尤其是中东,耶路撒冷。这些和类似结构的本质让我们看到索洛维约夫不仅是一个分类学家,而且是一个宗教哲学家,他认为形而上学的杠杆是对抗邪恶的必要条件。索洛维约夫在《三次对话》的开头就反思了邪恶是否只是善的缺失,是一种容易被消灭的幽灵,还是邪恶是一种具有自身实质和本质的真实力量,不是被抽象的善打败,而是被神-人打败,这并非没有原因。因此,《三个对话,包括一个反基督的小故事》不仅仅是一个关于世界历史结局的预言,在这个预言中,反基督者以社会主义者、人道主义者和慈善家的名义出现,他是一个政治家,欧洲美国的总统,准备向东正教开放圣所,并将教皇的权力归还给天主教徒,新教徒创建了一个研究圣经的机构,你只需要把他当作上帝来崇拜。这种假善的观念对生活本身是有害的。闪光的未必都是金子——这是《三话》的格言。好不是由一个人生产了多少商品来决定的,而是由他为什么而做的事情来决定的。在某种意义上,索洛维约夫创立了俄罗斯自由主义和法律哲学(有尊严生存的人权、对死刑的批评)。p.i.诺夫哥罗德采夫将索洛维约夫称为莫斯科法律哲学学派的创始人。索洛维约夫认为法律是确保社会中最低限度的善的一种方式,将法律和道德联系起来,将法律建立在道德要求的基础上,它不能与之分离,否则法律规范就会退化,变成一种道德崇拜。索洛维约夫写道:“法律的任务根本不是把邪恶的世界变成上帝的王国,而只是确保它在时间到来之前不会变成地狱。”